Books Review | How to Do Everything Adobe Acrobat X
How to Do Almost everything Adobe Acrobat X
Unlock the total prospective of Adobe Acrobat X! Now it’s much easier than ever to generate interactive electronic documents that retain the search and truly feel of the originals. How to Do Anything: Adobe Acrobat X exhibits you how to establish, safe, optimize, and distribute PDFs. Get points for adding multimedia options, collaborating with other users, streamlining document opinions, and collecting distinctive file varieties in a PDF Portfolio. Based on Acrobat X Pro, which contains all the options of Acrobat X
List Price tag: $ 25.00
Value: $ 13.66
Adobe Following Effects CS5 Classroom in a Book
People innovative experts searching for the fastest, simplest, most detailed way to study Adobe Right after Effects CS5 select Adobe Right after Effects CS5 Classroom in a Book from the Adobe Inventive Team at Adobe Press. The 14 project-based mostly lessons in this book display readers step-by-step the essential procedures for operating in Right after Effects CS5 and how to operate effectively and supply in the widest potential variety of media types. In addition to knowing the essential components of the Soon after Effects interface, this comple
List Price tag: $ 59.99
Selling price: $ 32.49
Related posts:
- Books Review | Adobe Photoshop CS5 Classroom in a Book
- Books Review | Adobe InDesign CS5 Classroom in a Book
- Books Review | Adobe Illustrator CS5 Classroom in a Book
- Books Review | Adobe Dreamweaver CS5 Classroom in a Book Reviews
- Books Review | Adobe Premiere Pro CS5 Classroom in a Book





Simple, to the point,
Since it’s rare for software to come with manuals anymore, it usually takes a lot of trial-and-error for me to get it do do what I want it to. Because of this, I often feel I’m overlooking software features that didn’t come up otherwise. Getting a book like How to Do Everything with Adobe Acrobat X was a good way for me to discover what Acrobat X can do.
One of the most interesting things I learned from the book was the Stamp tool. This is a digital equivalent of a rubber stamps that were used on paper documents. It’s one of those seemingly minor things that gets used in offices around the world, and Adobe was able to turn it into a tool in Acrobat. The book teaches about how to apply, edit, and delete Stamps, as well as creating custom ones.
Another cool tool is the Email-based Review tool. For authors and publishers, this somewhat automates the practice of sending a document out to be reviewed. I can imagine peer-reviewed journals using this in their process. Masters and doctoral candidates can use this when creating their dissertations. The person reviewing the document doesn’t need to have Acrobat, but does need to have Adobe Reader.
The book is easy to read and understand – informative without being boring. I think the people who will get the most out of it are those who use Acrobat, but not on a regular basis. After learning how to do something, then forgetting it due to a lack of practice, this book can serve as a set of useful reminders.
Was this review helpful to you?
|Essential how to book for new users,
This book answered the questions I had in using the new features of Adobe Acrobat X. If you are upgrading to Acrobat X, you will need help with the newest features, such as inserting videos into your PDF files. Highly recommended!
Was this review helpful to you?
|Acrobat X,
This book is a real helper. I want from Acrobat Ver 5 to Ver X and was lost. The user interface had changed a lot. You can get answers to your Ver X questions elsewhere, but the transistion is faster if you buy and read the book.
Was this review helpful to you?
|After Effects Deconstructed,
This book won’t explain the program in detail, however it WILL get you up to speed with 14 lessons encompassing the most widely-used features of After Effects. The included CD offers lesson files and examples of finished projects-a great way of viewing the result you’re aiming for. Everything about the book is well organized and the chapters start off with the basics (such as animating text and shape layers), leading up to the Roto Brush tool and advanced editing techniques.
I went through several of the lessons in order to get a feel for the book’s accuracy, learning curve, and program features. I did find a few areas in the book that could have benefitted from an additional diagram or two (e.g. Restore Frame Size from the Render Queue panel was never found, though the book described it, assuming that it was easy enough to find. Not so.)
As someone familiar with many Adobe products, I found that After Effects has a much higher learning curve. I ventured to the web on many occasions in order to search a particular term or file extension being described in the book in order to learn and not blindly follow along.
I would recommend a basic appendix at the end of the book in order to give beginners new to the program a head start. While the book’s preface mentions that the book is not meant to replace program documentation, it wouldn’t have been too difficult to have added a few pages of useful information.
Was this review helpful to you?
|It Empowers You to say, “I CAN DO THIS!”,
I’ve been enamored with After Effects since 1993 when it’s founder, CoSA had it, before it went to Aldus and inevitably Adobe, over a very short period of time. I’ve studied it; I’ve even rubbed elbows with some of the planet’s foremost After Effects experts but like Premier and Soundbooth, I’ve never mastered any of them as I have InDesign, Illustrator, Photoshop, and others. Now a deadline is breathing down our necks so we are in crash learning mode for all three apps. We go way back with Classroom in a Book (Photoshop 5, maybe)? As a book series, it has had a few bumps in the road, mostly at the turn of the century, but of late (Creative Suites and beyond), they’ve been terrific. I’ve reviewed five Classroom in a Book (CIB) volumes for CS5, so far, in our quest to master the Master Collection. They’ve all gotten five stars from me (or disallowed fractions there of). December 27, 2010, I published a lengthy review of Premier Pro CS5. It was my favorite, so far. I compose these things as I learn, so I wrote this first paragraph on After Effects (AE) CS5 as I crack it open, later in the same day.
First, now that I have a handle on Premier, the AE interface seems like I’m right at home. AE, like many other Adobe apps, is all about layers. I go back to Photoshop 2.0 and Illustrator before it. As much as I like the way AE has a similar user interface (UI) to Premier, learning about a layers panel, which differs from Adobe apps, which I’m familiar with, is a bit troubling (but that’s not the fault of CIB, of course). I mention that with good reason: the first lesson of the book builds my confidence about my AE abilities. I’m on some familiar territory and in some new spaces but CIB makes it all feel doable.
This is one of those CIBs where plenty of consideration has been given to the readers’ learning curve. In the second lesson, on basic animation, the learning environment has been optimized with the ample availability of digital assets. This allows the readers to concentrate on the learning tasks, at hand, which are most important. That said, some of the original CIBs inspired us with some great assets to work with. They were clever enough to make us go, “That’s SOOO cool. I want to do more.” The third lesson on animating text signals the return of those days as do other CS5 CIBs. This is exactly the kind of things we need to do for the projects in front of us, in 2011. So, I not only know how to do it, but the example gets me revved about what the learning experience has empowered me to create.
If you are reading this with some Illustrator and Photoshop know-how, in your back pocket, and wondering if you have the knowledge to master After Effects, lesson 4 makes you feel very much at home. What you already know about pucker, bloat, stars, and gradient fills falls right into place with AE tools.
Not to over-simplify this or go off on a thematic direction which I am discovering, but AE is filled with many principles of not just other Adobe apps, but animation, the AE-way, borrows from other media-rooted metaphors. By way of example, lesson 5 shows how you use AE to animate a multimedia presentation. This is a nice departure from the more broadcast oriented projects. A few weeks ago, we posted to the Online Learning section of our website a PDF on using InDesign to create a series of Flash animations for a multimedia presentation. It’s a growing use of these apps. In this lesson, we are introduced to the parent-child relationships which we find in creating Dreamweaver website page hierarchies. If you’ve ever done big websites, you need not be told more, you know what this CIB volume is talking about. Though using the masking vector shapes also makes me feel at home, this portion of chapter 5 makes me feel like I’m back in some Phil Collins or Peter Gabriel early MTV video. The lesson is great; the sample is a little whacky.
The sixth chapter takes me back to the days of GoLive as it shows us how to duplicate animations with the Pick Whip. But, once again, CIB makes me feel more comfortable with AE as I go through each lesson.This one starts with layered Photoshop files and adds lighting. This is the lesson where we begin to get pretty serious about animation, but its all very doable, though at times I needed a little breathing space.
It’s pretty much impossible to be even moderately adept in Fireworks, Flash, InDesign, Illustrator, or Photoshop without knowing how to use the pen tool. This volume of CIB teaches you how to use that tool to create a mask and drop in a news clip, add reflection, blend it, 3D light the thing, and vignette the overall image. These are all techniques I am familiar with for still imagery, which I now feel very comfortable to apply in AE.
For CS5, Photoshop borrowed AE’s renown puppet tool. Before CS5 I would have struggled to figure this out in AE. Now lesson 8 is a breeze but not boring. In…
Read more
Was this review helpful to you?
|A clear and thorough introduction to the basics of After Effects CS5, including its newest features,
While some software guides focused on a new product simply add a few new sections to reflect upgrades, this book has been thoroughly rewritten and could easily stand alone as a solid introduction to After Effects. As you would expect in a guide published by Adobe, this “official training workbook” has been revised completely to reflect what’s new in Adobe After Effects CS5. It begins with the basics, but includes chapters on the new rotobrush, on color correction with the new Synthetic Aperture Color Finesse 3 plugin, on building 3d objects within After Effects, and on using mocha to track motion. So this would be a nice refresher for those who haven’t used After Effects in a while, and a great introduction for those who are just starting out with After Effects now. For a more thorough introduction to some of the basic features of After Effects, it would be good to supplement this with After Effects Apprentice.
I like that the book opens up by having you complete some actual animations before it really gets into the technical details of how to set up a workspace and the like. They do a nice job throughout of balancing introductions to the magic of After Effects with delivery of the nitty gritty details you have to know to make it work properly. They also do a very good job introducing the reader to “best practices” – ways of doing things that keep your workspace clean and well organized, and make it easy to find what you need. Occasionally they leave out things that will be obvious to those who’ve worked with AE before but might confuse newcomers – for example when they first have the reader work on a motion path, they assume it will be visible, but don’t mention that if it isn’t by default you need to click on the button in the Comp panel to make it visible.
The approach the authors take in this book is mostly just to lead the reader through creating several ready-made projects (whose basic elements have already been created, and are available on the included dvd) that will introduce them to a range of possible tweaks and procedures and effects. There isn’t always as much explanation as I’d have liked – and sometimes it feels like following a recipe, that simply says “do this, and then that” and doesn’t always explain the whys of each step, or what would happen if things were done differently. The main advantage of this approach is that it allows a beginner to see quickly some of the many things that can be done with After Effects. The disadvantage is that after going through things this quickly, the reader would not be very well prepared to apply similar effects in different projects without guidance. (This was especially evident in the Puppet Warp chapter, where they had the reader animate a cartoon character using the Puppet Warp tool, but instead of leading readers through the qualitative process of figuring out how to animate the character they just gave numbers for the positions of each body part at different times – so it was really a matter of just typing in lots of numbers rather than learning how to make it work and look right.) I think it would be stronger if they gave more exercises designed to help the reader put what they’ve learned into practice on projects that had more flexibility; in that sense, this guide is not as strong as After Effects Apprentice.
At the same time, for someone new to After Effects with CS5, I think this would be a very good introduction, because it does lead the reader through not only the standard skills you need to work with After Effects effectively, but also through several of its newest features, something that you wouldn’t get from, say, After Effects Apprentice. In fact, if it could be managed, I’d suggest that an ideal beginner’s course in After Effects CS5 would begin with this book as a way of getting into the program, and getting exposure to the range of its features, and then following that up with After Effects Apprentice to get a more in depth and flexible, practical introduction to the basics. For those who already have some experience with After Effects and want a refresher course, or for those who are just getting started with After Effects CS5 and want a fast introduction to what is possible, this book alone might not be a bad way to go. There are several things I learned from working through this book even though I’ve had some experience working with After Effects, and have worked through a few other books and several tutorials. The new…
Read more
Was this review helpful to you?
|